The reported findings of the European Consultation-Liaison Workgroup (ECLW) Collaborative Study describe consultation-liaison service delivery by 56 services from 11 European countries aggregated on a C-L service level. During the period of 1 year (1991), the participants applied a standardized, reliability tested method of patient data collection, and data were collected describing pertinent characteristics of the hospital, the C-L service, and the participating consultants. The consultation rate of 1% (median; 1.4% mean) underscores the discrepancy between epidemiology and the services delivered. The core function of C-L services in general hospitals is a quick, comprehensive emergency psychiatric function. Reasons to see patients were the following. deliberate self-harm (17%), substance abuse (7.2%), current psychiatric symptoms (38.6%), and unexplained physical complaints (18.6%) (all means). A significant number of patients are old and seriously ill. Mood disorders and organic mental disorders are most predominant (17.7%). Somatoform and dissociative disorders together constitute 7.5%. C-L services in European countries are mainly emergency psychiatric services and perform an important bridge function between primary, general health, and mental health care.
As the skin is an organ that has a primary function in tactile receptivity and reacts directly upon emotional stimuli, dermatological practice involves a psychosomatic dimension. It is, however, the high visibility of dermatoses and their easy accessibility which make the skin a direct target for behavioural problems. Furthermore, self-destructive tendencies and hypochondriacal features often express themselves through dermatological symptoms: dermatits artefacta and skin hypochondriasis are among the specific psychocutaneous disorders discussed here. In view of the clinical interface between dermatology and psychiatry, general guidelines are formulated and specific aspects of psychotherapy, behavioural treatment and psychotropic drug treatment are discussed.
In a double-blind multicentre trial in patients with major depression, the efficacy and the tolerability of sertraiine were compared with those of fluoxetine, during an eight-week acute treatment phase followed by a 24-week continuation treatment phase in treatment responders.A total of 165 patients who met DSM III-R criteria for moderate to severe major depression were randomized to receive either sertraline or fluoxetine for short-term and continuation treatment with initial daily dosages of either 50 mg of sertraline or 20 mg of fluoxetine. In the event of an inadequate response after 4 weeks of double-blind therapy these doses could be doubled.Both treatment groups demonstrated similar improvements on both the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D) and the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), during the acute phase as well as during the continuation phase. Both sertraline and fluoxetine were well tolerated, the most common side-effects being gastrointestinal symptoms. Significantly more patients in the fluoxetine-treatment group experienced activating adverse events.The study demonstrates similar antidepressant efficacy and tolerability for sertraline and fluoxetine in acute and continuation treatment and equivalence of sertraline 50 rng daily with fluoxetine 20 mg daily in the treatment of depression.
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